Opinion
In this aggressively litigated business dispute between a major creditor and the assignee for the benefit of creditors of a troubled company, the creditor moved to amend its complaint to name the assignee’s attorney as a defendant and to add a cause of action against the attorney and the assignee alleging an attorney-client conspiracy to deplete the assets of the assignor corporation.
We face the question of whether California law allows this plaintiff to pursue such conspiracy claims based solely on allegations of unnecessary and excessive fees charged by assignee’s counsel that derive from the contention that counsel for an assignee for the benefit of creditors also owes a fiduciary duty to creditors, including a creditor that is adverse to the client assignee.
We reject this contention.
INTRODUCTION
Plaintiff Berg & Berg Enterprises, LLC (Berg) sued defendant Sherwood Partners, Inc. (Sherwood) in this action for breach of fiduciary duty and related causes of action concerning Sherwood’s performance as an assignee for the benefit of creditors. Berg was the largest creditor of the assignor, Pluris, Inc. Berg later sought leave to file a second amended complaint that named the law firm representing Sherwood, SulmeyerKupetz (Sulmeyer), as a defendant in causes of action for declaratory relief, accounting, waste of corporate assets, and conspiracy to waste corporate assets. The gist of the allegations against Sulmeyer was that it had acted in concert with its client, Sherwood, to deplete Pluris’s assets by performing unnecessary legal services that were adverse to Berg and by excessively billing Sherwood for those services, which were paid for from the assigned assets. There were no allegations of fraud against Sulmeyer and the proposed pleading did not allege that Sulmeyer, as Sherwood’s counsel, owed any duty to Berg either singly as the largest creditor or generally as one member of the class of creditors.
To resolve the appeal, we examine whether under California law, by virtue solely of an attorney’s representation of the assignee for the benefit of creditors, the attorney owes a duty of care to a particular creditor or to the class of creditors as a whole, absent allegations of fraud or a financial interest in the assigned assets beyond as a source for payment of fees earned in the course of that representation. We hold that counsel for the assignee owes no such independent duty to these third parties as a matter of law. We further hold that the exception to the application of section 1714.10 provided in subdivision (c)(2) thereof, which allows the filing of an action for conspiracy without prefiling approval where “the attorney’s acts go beyond the performance of a professional duty to serve the client and involve a conspiracy to violate a legal duty in furtherance of the attorney’s financial gain,” means that the economic benefit derived by the attorney is over and above monetary compensation received in exchange for professional fees earned for the representation of his or her client.
We accordingly reverse the trial court’s order that allowed Berg’s amended complaint alleging attorney-client conspiracy-based claims against Sulmeyer and Sherwood.
STATEMENT OF THE CASE 3
Berg, a real estate developer, agreed to construct two commercial office buildings in San Jose and then lease them to Pluris, Inc., a network router developer.
4
The parties entered into a written lease but Pluris repudiated the
agreement even before taking possession of the buildings. Berg then sued Pluris for $100 million. After Pluris represented that it could realize new financing of at least $50 million but for the lawsuit, the parties entered into a settlement that included Pluris’s agreement to pay Berg $16 million, evidenced by a promissory note that was secured by certain Pluris assets. Berg made known that it would seek Pluris’s involuntary bankruptcy if the financing deal failed because it perceived in this a beneficial opportunity
Pluris raised some money, but not what it had represented it could and not enough to either keep it in business or satisfy its obligation to Berg. Pluris then generally assigned all of its assets to Sherwood for the benefit of its creditors under Code of Civil Procedure sections 493.010 and 1802. The assets consisted of $4.5 million cash, tangible property worth between $300,000 and $700,000, and intellectual property worth between $100,000 and $300,000.
After some initial discussion and disagreement between Sherwood and Berg over Berg’s claim and the manner in which Pluris’s assets might be best marshaled and distributed, Berg, along with two other Pluris creditors, attempted to force Pluris into involuntary bankruptcy under section 303 of title 11 of the United States Code. As part of this effort, Berg offered a plan in which it would pay the estate $150,000, reduce its claim by $1.5 million in exchange for Pluris’s stock, and further reduce its claim by $2.5 million in exchange for Pluris’s tangible and intellectual property.
Sherwood, through Sulmeyer’s representation, successfully defeated Pluris’s creditors’ efforts to force it into bankruptcy and the bankruptcy court ultimately dismissed the involuntary petition. One of the reasons the court gave for declining to authorize an involuntary bankruptcy was that Berg appeared to have been primarily motivated by the possibility of acquiring Pluris’s net operating losses — not necessarily a proper basis for forcing a debtor into involuntary bankruptcy.
There were other disputes between Berg and Sherwood in connection with the administration of Pluris’s assets, the details of which are not material here. Suffice it to say that the parties were adverse and that Sulmeyer represented Sherwood in its ongoing battle against Berg that was being waged on several fronts.
In an expansion of the theater, after the bankruptcy court dismissed the involuntary proceedings initiated against Pluris, Berg sued Sherwood in this action. The complaint pleaded causes of action all surrounding the alleged breach of the fiduciary duty owed by Sherwood, as assignee, to Berg, as one of Pluris’s creditors. It claimed that Sherwood’s actions had resulted in the depletion of Pluris’s assets that would otherwise have been available to satisfy Pluris’s debt to Berg. Sulmeyer appeared in the action as counsel for Sherwood, which answered and filed a cross-complaint against Berg that in essence sought to avoid Berg’s claims of a priority lien affecting Pluris’s assigned assets.
Escalating the hostilities, Sherwood, through Sulmeyer, also filed an application in the bankruptcy court for reimbursement of $187,642.43 in attorney fees and costs it had incurred in connection with its successful opposition to Berg’s earlier efforts to place Pluris into involuntary bankruptcy, and for $500,000 in sanctions against Berg for its conduct in connection with those efforts. Not only did the bankruptcy court deny Sherwood’s motion, but the judge excoriated Sulmeyer at the hearing over the $175,000 in fees it had charged in connection with a “straightforward” motion.
Apparently emboldened by that development, Berg then filed its motion in this action for leave to amend its complaint. Berg sought to name Sulmeyer as a defendant in three existing causes of action and to add a claim for conspiracy against Sulmeyer and Sherwood arising from their joint conduct that had been adversarial to Berg’s efforts to advance its creditor’s claim against the Pluris assets. Though Berg did not file a petition to obtain prefiling
Berg’s proposed pleading alleged that Sulmeyer had acted as counsel to Berg’s adversary, Sherwood, who, as assignee, owed a fiduciary duty to all of Pluris’s creditors and “especially [to] Berg” as the largest creditor. It named Sulmeyer in existing causes of action labeled declaratory relief, accounting and return, and waste of corporate assets, and in the single new claim for conspiracy to waste corporate assets. The pleading did not contain any allegations concerning the existence of a duty owed to Berg by Sulmeyer. Nor did it include any facts amounting to fraud by Sulmeyer or financial gain or receipt of money by Sulmeyer other than as compensation, albeit excessive, for legal services rendered to Sherwood. 5 The factual substance of the allegations against Sulmeyer (incorporated into every cause of action and pleaded in introductory background under the heading “The Sherwood and Sulmeyer Conspiracy to Waste Pluris[’s] Remaining Corporate Assets”) was that Sulmeyer performed unnecessary and unreasonable services for Sherwood that were adverse to Berg and the other creditors, and it excessively charged Sherwood for those services for which Sherwood paid from Pluris assets. The allegations specific to Sulmeyer included the following:
— “A real and actual controversy has arisen and now exists between [Berg] and Sherwood and Sulmeyer regarding Berg’s respective future rights, liabilities and obligations pursuant to the [Berg-Pluris] Settlement Agreement.” (Declaratory relief.)
— There was an “unknown amount of cash wasted on Sulmeyer’s services, [¶] [Berg] is therefore entitled to the appointment of a new trustee/assignee to investigate Pluris’[s], Sherwood[’s,] and Sulmeyer’s books and records and then [to] forward to Pluris’[s] creditors all monies due and owing.” (Accounting.)
— “Rather than working with Plurisfs] creditors, the largest of which is Berg, Sherwood retained Sulmeyer to attack Berg’s standing as a creditor. . . . [][] Since July 11, 2002, Sherwood and Sulmeyer have unreasonably wasted the remaining corporate assets of Pluris in a manner not permitted by law.” (Waste.)
— “Sherwood[’s] and Sulmeyer’s waste of corporate assets include[s], but [is]not limited to, spending an inordinate amount of time dedicated to attacking Berg’s secured claims against Pluris and moving to dismiss the involuntary bankruptcy petition. [][] Sherwood and Sulmeyer have to date unreasonably wasted in excess of $800,000 in the administration of Pluris[’s] estate. A majority of Sherwood[’s] and Sulmeyer’s waste of Pluris[’s] assets has been dedicated to protecting their own interests and fees rather than protecting the interests and claims of Pluris[’s] creditors.” (Waste.)
■— “Sherwood and Sulmeyer then began to conspire and agreed to unlawfully attack Berg’s standing as a creditor. From information provided, it is believed that Sulmeyer spent over 370 hours from July 11 through September 30, 2002 on their attack on Berg’s claim. For the work performed, Sulmeyer billed Sherwood approximately $141,000. [j[] Since July 11, 2002, Sherwood and Sulmeyer have continued the conspiracy to waste the remaining corporate assets in a manner not permitted by law.” (Conspiracy to waste.)
The conspiracy claim, which is the final cause of action of the proposed pleading, incorporated all prior allegations and merely repeated what had already been alleged in the prior claims, adding only that Sherwood and Sulmeyer together conspired to perform those acts previously alleged. Thus, all the claims pleaded against Sulmeyer concerned the union of conduct between it and its client, Sherwood, vis-a-vis the administration of the Pluris assets, and activities alleged to be adverse to Berg’s interest as a Pluris creditor. The prayer of the complaint sought, among other things, punitive damages against both Sherwood and Sulmeyer and further requested an order requiring Sulmeyer to “turn over all records of its services and invoices concerning Berg. . . .”
Sulmeyer did not oppose Berg’s motion to amend as a party on its own behalf. But as counsel for Sherwood, it filed opposition that included the charge that the motion had not met the technical or substantive prepleading requirements of section 1714.10 as a condition for asserting a claim against an attorney for conspiracy with a client. Sherwood also objected to the evidence that Berg had submitted in support of the motion. Berg’s reply reiterated that the motion substantially complied with section 1714.10 such that the proposed pleading should be allowed.
Despite the allegations of attorney-client conspiracy, the trial court declined to address the merits of the proposed pleading and treated the matter as any other motion for leave to amend, granting it based on the asserted liberality in matters of pleading and subject to defendants’ ability to attack the new complaint by demurrer or otherwise. This appeal by both Sherwood and Sulmeyer followed. 6
1. Section 1714.10
Section 1714.10 prohibits the unauthorized filing of an action for nonexempt civil conspiracy against an attorney based on conduct arising from the representation of a client that is in connection with any attempt to contest or compromise a claim or dispute. It requires a plaintiff who desires to pursue such an action to first commence a special proceeding by filing a verified petition naming the attorney as respondent; the trial court then orders service upon the attorney, who is thereby given the opportunity to appear and contest the petition. If the petition is granted, the plaintiff is permitted to file the complaint in the main action, subject to the attorney’s right to appeal the order. If, on the other hand, the petition is denied, the plaintiff is foreclosed from filing the complaint, likewise subject to his or her right to appeal that determination. As an alternative to the petition procedure, if a plaintiff files a nonexempt action against an attorney based on conspiracy with a client without first commencing the special proceeding as provided under section 1714.10, the attorney may effectively initiate the proceeding that will result in an appealable order by demurring or moving to strike the pleading for the plaintiff’s failure to have complied with the prepleading statute.
“Section 1714.10 was intended to weed out the harassing claim of conspiracy that is so lacking in reasonable foundation as to verge on the frivolous. [Citations.] The weeding tool is the requirement of prefiling approval by the court, which must be presented with a verified petition accompanied by a copy of the proposed pleading and ‘supporting affidavits stating the facts upon which the liability is based’; the pleading is not to be filed until the court has determined ‘. . . the party seeking to file the pleading has established that there is a reasonable probability that the party will prevail in the action.’ [Citation.]”
(Evans v. Pillsbury, Madison & Sutro
(1998)
Section 1714.10, subdivision (a), specifically provides: “No cause of action against an attorney for a civil conspiracy with his or her client arising from any attempt to contest or compromise a claim or dispute, and which is based upon the attorney’s representation of the client, shall be included in a complaint or other pleading unless the court enters an order allowing the pleading that includes the claim for civil conspiracy to be filed after the court determines that the party seeking to file the pleading has established that there is a reasonable probability that the party will prevail in the action. The court may allow the filing of a pleading claiming liability based upon such a civil conspiracy following the filing of a verified petition therefor accompanied by the proposed pleading and supporting affidavits stating the facts upon which the liability is based. The court shall order service of the petition upon the party against whom the action is proposed to be filed and permit that party to submit opposing affidavits prior to making its determination.”
Section 1714.10, subdivision (c), specifies exceptions to the statute’s application. It provides: “This section shall not apply to a cause of action against an attorney for a civil conspiracy with his or her client, where (1) the attorney has an independent legal duty to the plaintiff, or (2) the attorney’s acts go beyond the performance of a professional duty to serve the client and involve a conspiracy to violate a legal duty in furtherance of the attorney’s financial gain.”
The Legislature originally enacted section 1714.10 in 1988 in response to
Wolfrich Corp. v. United Services Automobile Assn.
(1983)
The statute is akin to several other “gatekeeping” statutes enacted by the Legislature in the same vein but applicable in other contexts. (See, e.g., Code Civ. Proc., § 425.13 [punitive damages claim against a health care provider]; Code Civ. Proc., § 425.14 [punitive damages claim against religious corporation]; Code Civ. Proc., § 425.15 [negligence claim against volunteer director or officer of nonprofit corporation]; Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16 [“SLAPP” (strategic lawsuit against public participation) suit affecting free speech/right of petition]; Civ. Code, § 3295, subd. (c) [discovery of punitive damages information]; see also
College Hospital Inc. v. Superior Court
(1994)
But the court in Doctors’ Co. did articulate two settings in which a conspiracy claim might lie against an attorney for participating in the violation of a duty owed by the client to another: (1) where the attorney violates a duty that he or she independently owes to the plaintiff; and (2) where the attorney’s acts go beyond the performance of a professional duty owed to the client and are, in addition, done for his or her own personal financial gain. (Doctors’ Co., supra, 49 Cal.3d at pp. 46-47; Pavicich, supra, 85 Cal.App.4th at pp. 391-392.) Both of these settings, by definition, involve conduct of the attorney in which he or she acts not just as an agent for a principal, the client, but also for himself or herself independently. In these settings then, it is appropriate that the agent’s immunity rule does not protect the attorney’s conduct, for he or she is acting in more than just a representative capacity.
The Legislature responded to the court’s holding in Doctors’ Co. in 1991 by amending section 1714.10. First, the amendment limited the section’s application to attorney-client conspiracy actions that arise from any attempt to contest or compromise a claim or dispute. Second, it expressly excepted from the statute’s application the two contexts identified in Doctors’ Co. in which a viable attorney-client conspiracy can be asserted. (Pavicich, supra, 85 Cal.App.4th at pp. 392-394.)
As we observed in Pavicich, the effect of the amendment on the statute’s application is anomalous. Since the statute now removes from its scope the two circumstances in which a valid attorney-client conspiracy claim may be asserted, its gatekeeping function applies only to attorney-client conspiracy claims that are not viable as a matter of law in any event. (Pavicich, supra, 85 Cal.App.4th at pp. 394-396.) Thus, a plaintiff who can plead a viable claim for conspiracy against an attorney need not follow the petition procedure outlined in the statute as such a claim necessarily falls within the stated exceptions to its application.
Applying section 1714.10 thus requires the court to initially determine whether the pleading falls either within the coverage of the statute or, instead, within one of its stated exceptions. This determination pivots, in turn, on whether the proposed
2. Appealability
An order allowing an amended pleading is not ordinarily appealable.
(Freeman v. City of Beverly Hills
(1994)
Here, Berg did not file a petition under section 1714.10. Instead, it simply moved to amend the complaint to name Sherwood’s counsel, Sulmeyer, as a party in three existing causes of action and to add a claim for attorney-client conspiracy. Nor did Sulmeyer demur to the new pleading or move to strike it as suggested by section 1714.10, subdivision (b). Instead, it simply opposed the motion to amend solely on behalf of its client, Sherwood. Both sides, however, treated this case, post, as they do here, as governed by section 1714.10 by virtue of the conspiracy claim. Beyond that, they dispute on appeal whether this section makes the order granting leave to file the proposed pleading appealable in its entirety, or only as to the seventh cause of action, labeled “conspiracy to waste corporate assets.”
In addressing the questions of appealability and the proper scope of our review, we look to section 1714.10 itself. By its language, this section affects a “cause of action against an attorney for a civil conspiracy with his or her client arising from any attempt to contest or compromise a claim or dispute, and which is based on the attorney’s representation of the client.” (§ 1714.10, subd. (a).) Such a claim may not be included in a complaint unless the court enters an order allowing “the pleading that includes the claim for civil conspiracy.” (Ibid., italics added.) The court may do so only after a showing by the plaintiff of a “reasonable probability” of prevailing “in the action.” (Ibid., italics added.) The lawyer defendant must raise the defense of a plaintiff’s lack of compliance with this section at the first opportunity, or else it is waived. (§ 1714.10, subd. (b).) An order made under this section that determines the rights of an attorney against whom a pleading has been or is proposed to be filed is appealable.
Here, though no petition was filed under section 1714.10, both Berg and Sherwood addressed the applicability of this section in the trial court in connection with Berg’s motion to amend. And the proposed amendments that concerned Sulmeyer entirely related to its liability for joint conduct with Sherwood in the course of Sulmeyer’s legal representation of that client, thus potentially invoking the statute depending on whether a valid claim was actually stated. The order that allowed the pleading, over Sherwood’s objection based on section 1714.10, also determined Sulmeyer’s rights in connection with claims that by their very nature were likewise potentially governed by the section because the conduct of which defendants were accused falls within its ambit. Finally,
Based on the broad language of section 1714.10 concerning its application to the entire pleading of which a targeted conspiracy claim is only a part, the statute’s protective purpose to weed out at an early stage unmeritorious conspiracy claims that disrupt the attorney-client relationship, and the procedural circumstances here that beckon these themes, we consider the order that allowed the filing of Berg’s second amended complaint to be not only appealable, but appealable in its entirety.
Case law supports this conclusion in both respects. In
Burtscher
v.
Burtscher
(1994)
3. Scope and Standard of Review
It may not necessarily follow from our conclusion regarding appealability that the scope of our review extends to all causes of action that were the subject of amendment. But the particulars of the new pleading in this case dictate that result. As discussed,
ante,
the amendments outlined the factual basis for the conspiracy claim in introductory, general allegations that were incorporated into every cause of action. More fundamentally,
all
the allegations regarding Sulmeyer’s conduct, regardless of the label on the cause of action, arose out of its agreement to represent Sherwood and conduct in which it jointly engaged with its client, Sherwood, in the course of that legal representation. And the actual claim for conspiracy merely repeated allegations against Sulmeyer that were first leveled elsewhere in the pleading. Under these circumstances, the factual basis for the conspiracy claim — which
is derivative in any event — is so intertwined with the other causes of action pleaded against Sulmeyer that it is not severable for purposes of our review under section 1714.10. In other words, all the claims alleged against Sulmeyer involve conduct that falls within the ambit of the statute regardless of the labels attached to the particular causes of action. Thus, the scope of review in this case must necessarily reach all the new allegations and causes of action that are pleaded jointly against Sulmeyer and Sherwood. Anything less would afford incomplete review of the attorney-client conspiracy
Evans, supra,
Similarly, the court in
Alden v. Hindin
(2003)
In assessing appealability, we have already concluded that the order granting leave to amend here is conceptually the same as an order stemming from a section
Having addressed these numerous preliminary considerations that frame our review of the trial court’s order in this case, we next determine whether section 1714.10 or one of its exceptions applies to Berg’s amended pleading. This exercise, as we have observed, comes down to analyzing whether Berg has stated a viable claim against Sulmeyer for conspiracy with its client, Sherwood.
ANALYSIS
1. The Scope of Section 1714.10
The general coverage of section 1714.10, before reaching its exceptions, extends to causes of action “against an attorney for a civil conspiracy with his or her client arising from any attempt to contest or compromise a claim or dispute, and which is based upon the attorney’s representation of the client____” (§ 1714.10, subd. (a).)
In order to maintain an action for conspiracy, a plaintiff must allege that the defendant had knowledge of and agreed to both the objective and the course of action that resulted in the injury, that there was a wrongful act committed pursuant to that agreement, and that there was resulting damage.
(Quelimane Co. v. Stewart Title Guaranty Co.
(1998)
By these descriptions, and based on the actual allegations of the proposed pleading in which Sulmeyer is not alleged to have engaged in other than conspiratorial conduct arising out of its legal representation of Sherwood in connection with the Pluris assets and Sherwood’s dispute with Berg, we perceive little difficulty in concluding that all four claims alleged against Sulmeyer fall within the initial scope of section 1714.10. This conclusion remains without regard to the labels attached to the causes of action or whether the word “conspiracy” — having no talismanic significance — appears in them. The particular allegations throughout Berg’s entire complaint of the union of conduct between attorney and client arising out of the legal representation, the absence of other allegations of independent conduct by Sulmeyer, and the incorporation of conspiracy allegations into every cause of action, more than suffice to subject all the claims against Sulmeyer to the initial coverage of section 1714.10, as provided in subdivision (a).
2. The Statutory Exceptions
Having so concluded, we proceed to the next step in the analysis, which is ascertaining whether Berg has shown that the pleaded claims fall within either of the statute’s exceptions, i.e., whether they allege a viable conspiracy claim against Sulmeyer such that prefiling approval is not required. (Pavicich, supra, 85 Cal.App.4th at pp. 390-396.) To refresh, to come within the statute’s exceptions and thereby state a viable conspiracy claim against an attorney, the complaint must plead either that “(1) the attorney has an independent legal duty to the plaintiff, or (2) the attorney’s acts go beyond the performance of a professional duty to serve the client and involve a conspiracy to violate a legal duty in furtherance of the attorney’s financial gain.” (§ 1714.10, subd. (c).)
Berg contends that both statutory exceptions apply to its pleaded allegations while Sulmeyer contends that neither does because it owed no legal duty to Berg and because it was acting entirely within its representative role as Sherwood’s counsel and its only alleged financial interest was in the professional fees that it charged its client.
A. Did Sulmeyer Owe an Independent Duty to Berg?
The proposed complaint here does not allege that Sulmeyer owed any independent duty to Berg or that it had any relationship to the dispute between Sherwood and Berg other than its role as Sherwood’s counsel, for which it received excessive professional fees that were paid by Sherwood from Pluris assets. Nor did Berg’s pleading allege that Sulmeyer committed fraud, which attorneys, like anyone else, have an independent duty to avoid.
(Pavicich, supra,
The parties agree that Sherwood, as the assignee for the benefit of Pluris’s creditors, does owe a fiduciary duty to the creditors, including Berg, and that its role is akin to that of a trustee or administrator of an estate who owes fiduciary duties to the estate’s beneficiaries.
(Farmers etc. Nat. Bank v. Peterson
(1936)
We start with the firm proposition in the analogous trust context that “ ‘[t]he attorney for the trustee of a trust is not, by virtue of this relationship, also the attorney for the beneficiaries of the trust. The attorney represents only the trustee.’ [Citations.]”
(Wells Fargo Bank
v.
Superior Court
(2000)
There are cases that appear to stand as exceptions to the general rule just enunciated. But all of these cases have in common either that the attorney violated a separate duty that he or she independently owed to the third party, or the attorney participated in a breach of duty owed by the client and did so for his or her own personal financial advantage. We observe that these factors mirror the statutory exceptions to the application of section 1714.10. (§ 1714.10, subd. (c).) In both of these exceptional settings, the alleged facts show the attorney’s role to have exceeded that of a legal representative acting strictly for a client.
This was the case in
Morales
v.
Field, DeGoff, Huppert & MacGowan
(1979)
Similarly, in
Pierce v. Lyman
(1991)
Likewise, in
Wolf v. Mitchell, Silberberg & Knupp
(1999)
Despite Berg’s contention that Sulmeyer, as counsel to the assignee for the benefit of Pluris’s creditors, owed a duty to Berg simply by virtue of that representation, we find California law to be to the contrary.
12
Berg also argues that Sulmeyer owed Berg an independent duty of care by analogy to the bankruptcy setting, an asserted parallel to the state law assignment for the benefit of creditors. (Cf.
Blonder v. Cumberland Engineering
(1999)
We have extensively reviewed federal authorities on this question. We are persuaded by the reasoning of those cases
We accordingly reject the reasoning offered by bankruptcy cases on which Berg relies in positing the existence of a fiduciary duty owed by counsel for the trustee or debtor in bankruptcy to creditors, and by the extension of which Berg argues for an analogous duty in the state law assignment for the benefit of creditors context. (See e.g.,
In re Sky Valley, Inc.
(Bankr. N.D.Ga. 1992)
Based on these federal bankruptcy cases and on the absence of California authority directly on point, Berg asks us to find that Sulmeyer owed a duty to it here. To do so would conflict with policy choices inherent in California law, and would dangerously broaden the limited circumstances in which an attorney has been held to owe a duty to a third party not in privity. In general, an attorney owes a duty of care, and is thus answerable for a breach of that duty, only to the client with whom he or she stands in privity.
(Borissoff v. Taylor & Faust
(2004)
The question whether a duty of care exists, or should be found, is one of law, and the determination is reached by balancing policy considerations under the circumstances of the particular case.
(Goodman v. Kennedy, supra,
Relevant to the weighing of these considerations here, we note that Berg suggests on appeal that because of the “heightened” fiduciary duty that Sulmeyer owes to it, and Sulmeyer’s presence in this action as a defendant, “Sulmeyer likely has a conflict of interest in its representation of Sherwood in this action” since Sulmeyer “cannot fulfill a fiduciary duty to act in the best interest of all of the creditors and at the same time be adverse to a single creditor — Berg.”
We also observe that Berg’s allegations against Sulmeyer, whether true or not, depend on the fact finder’s second guessing of Sulmeyer’s litigation and tactical strategies in the representation of its client, to whom Berg is adverse, and the need to discover information that is likely protected by the attorney-client privilege and the attorney work-product exclusion. Particularly in light of the affirmative purpose of section 1714.10, which is to weed out unmeritorious conspiracy claims tactically designed to disrupt the attorney-client relationship, we conclude that factors (7) and (8), listed
ante,
weigh against the finding of a duty owed by Sulmeyer to Berg in the circumstances of this case and far outweigh any of the other factors that might favor a duty. The existence of such a duty here would simply put Sulmeyer in an untenable and conflicted ethical position vis-a-vis its own client, to whom Sulmeyer owes its undivided loyalty, and would impose too great a burden and a disincentive on a lawyer contemplating the representation of an assignee for the benefit of creditors.
(Lucas v. Hamm, supra,
Accordingly, we hold that based on the allegations of Berg’s second amended complaint, Sulmeyer did not owe an independent duty to Berg solely by virtue of its representation of Sherwood as assignee for the benefit of Pluris’s creditors and its concomitant charging of professional fees, albeit alleged to be unnecessary and excessive, for legal services that were adverse to Berg. Without more, Berg has failed to allege facts that support the existence of an independent duty owed to it by Sulmeyer as a matter of law, and the exception provided at section 1714.10, subdivision (c)(1), does not apply to exempt Berg’s pleading from the application of
B. Were Sulmeyer’s Alleged Conspiratorial Actions Performed Outside of its Duties to its Client and in Violation of a Legal Duty Owed to Berg for Sulmeyer’s Personal Financial Advantage?
The second exception to the application of section 1714.10 is the circumstance in which “the attorney’s acts go beyond the performance of a professional duty to serve the client and involve a conspiracy to violate a legal duty in furtherance of the attorney’s financial gain.” (§ 1714.10, subd. (c).) This exception has more than one component. First, the lawyer’s actions must have been taken in excess of his or her official representative capacity in service to his or her client. Second, they must also have violated a legal duty running to the plaintiff and have been in furtherance of the lawyer’s own financial advantage.
There is a dearth of case law interpreting or construing the first part of this exception. But we think that by its plain terms, it means that the attorney was acting not merely as an agent for his or her client, but also for his or her own benefit, and that the conduct therefore went “beyond” the representative role. We find support for this construction not only in its harkening to the next element, that the attorney acted for his or her own financial advantage, but also in
Doctors’ Co.,
which spelled out the exceptions to an attorney’s liability for conspiracy later incorporated into section 1714.10 as the statute’s exceptions.
(Pavicich, supra,
85 Cal.App.4th at pp. 391-394.) As the high court stated in
Doctors’ Co.,
“an attorney who conspires to cause a client to violate a statutory duty peculiar to the client may be acting not only in the
performance of a professional duty to serve the client but also in furtherance of the attorney’s own financial gain.”
15
(Doctors’ Co., supra,
Thus, the second part of the exception in a sense defines the first in that it suggests that the attorney’s exceptional conduct that is outside the performance of his or her duties to the client are those activities that are taken in furtherance of the attorney’s own financial advantage. Cases have interpreted the “financial advantage” exception to the agent’s immunity rule to mean a personal advantage or gain that is over and above ordinary professional fees earned as compensation for performance of the agency. (See, e.g.,
Evans, supra,
65 Cal.App.4th at pp. 605-607 [attorney’s own financial gain interpreted as when the attorney has a personal financial interest in the outcome of the litigation separate and apart from customary fees];
Cooper
v.
Equity Gen. Insurance
(1990)
In
Black v. Sullivan
(1975)
The purpose of this limitation on the “financial advantage” test, an exception to the agent’s immunity rule, is to protect employees and agents of a principal against the imposition of vicarious liability for aiding and abetting or conspiracy for the mere fact of their paid employment. (Ibid.; see also
Neilson v. Union Bank of California, N.A., supra,
We turn now to the first part of the exception. It seems clear that Berg’s allegations regarding Sulmeyer’s conduct do not place that conduct beyond Sulmeyer’s representation of its client, Sherwood. While the services rendered were alleged to have been unnecessary and not beneficial to the administration of the Pluris assets, they were nonetheless alleged to have been performed on Sherwood’s behalf and for its benefit. Thus, we are hard pressed to conclude that Berg has well pleaded the applicability of this exception, no matter how unnecessary Sulmeyer’s services or how excessive its billing practices were alleged to have been. Given that the plaintiff bears the burden under section 1714.10, and the statute’s purposes, we conclude that the particular allegations made against Sulmeyer here do not bring its conduct within the second exception to section 1714.10 because all of Sulmeyer’s conduct was alleged to have been in service of its client and within this representative capacity, even though the conduct generated professional fees that were alleged to have been excessive.
Thus, based on Berg’s particular allegations against Sulmeyer here, we conclude that the complaint failed to allege not only that Sulmeyer’s acts went beyond the performance of a professional duty to its client, but also that Sulmeyer’s alleged activities were in furtherance of its own financial gain as provided in section 1714.10, subdivision (c)(2). We further hold that “in furtherance of the attorney’s financial gain” as used in this subsection means that through the conspiracy, the attorney derived economic advantage over and above monetary compensation received in exchange for professional services actually rendered on behalf of a client. Accordingly, the second statutory exception to the application of section 1714.10 does not apply in this case. It follows that Berg’s claims against Sulmeyer fall within the coverage of, rather than the exceptions to, the statute. This being the case, Berg has failed to state a prima facie claim of conspiracy against Sulmeyer, and the pleading in which the claims were alleged is accordingly disallowed. (Pavicich, supra, 85 Cal.App.4th at pp. 394-396.)
CONCLUSION
The trial court’s order allowing Berg’s second amended complaint is an appealable order under section 1714.10, and the scope of our de nova review extends to all the claims pleaded against Sulmeyer. Since the causes of action other than the one particularly designated as conspiracy all derive their vitality from incorporated conspiracy-based allegations, they rise or fall with those allegations and do not require separate analysis. All the claims against Sulmeyer, by their particular allegations, fall within the ambit of section 1714.10 and do not come within either of the section’s two exceptions. Since Berg’s allegations thus fail to state viable claims against Sulmeyer in that they do not, as a matter of law, allege a prima facie case against it for conspiracy with its client, Sherwood, the trial court should have denied the motion for leave to amend by which Berg sought to file the pleading in which the claims were alleged, without the need to consider the evidence offered by Berg in support of its motion or Sulmeyer’s objections thereto.
17
We accordingly
DISPOSITION
The order granting Berg’s motion for leave to file the proposed second amended complaint, which we treat as an order entered under section 1714.10, is reversed.
Rushing, P. J., and Walsh, J., * concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 25, 2005, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied November 2, 2005.
Notes
Further unspecified statutory references are to the Civil Code.
Sulmeyer alone briefed the issues on appeal for the appellants’ side. Sherwood joined these briefs and did not separately raise any issues on its own behalf. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 13(a)(5).)
The underlying facts are largely taken from the papers submitted in connection with Berg’s motion to amend, and they have thus not yet been established in the case.
Several Berg-related entities operated as actors on Berg’s side of the transaction. Because this fact is background only and is not material to the disposition of the case, we do not differentiate among them and refer solely to Berg.
In an apparent attempt to shore up its new pleading, and as pointed out by Sherwood at oral argument, the second amended complaint that Berg filed after leave to amend was granted is different from the proposed pleading that the trial court actually considered and allowed. For example, the later version alleges, in conclusory fashion, that Sulmeyer owed a duty to Berg as a creditor of Pluris (“As counsel for Sherwood, Sulmeyer owed Pluris[’s] creditors a duty not to waste PIuris[’s] assets.”). But since the pleading that was filed was not authorized by the trial court, we conduct our review based on the proposed pleading that was actually permitted. We also question counsel’s candor in filing a different pleading from that which was the subject of both the motion to amend and the court’s order. And, as addressed in this opinion, based on the same underlying facts as alleged in both versions of the pleading, Sulmeyer owed no duty to Berg as a matter of law. Therefore, consideration of the later pleading, which is not before us, would not change the result we reach here.
Sherwood and Sulmeyer each filed its own separate notice of appeal, which was Sulmeyer’s first “appearance” in the action as a party. Though not addressed by either party on appeal, this raises the question of Sulmeyer’s standing to appeal. Under Code of Civil Procedure section 902, an appeal may be pursued only by an aggrieved party, which is a person named as a party of record — as Sulmeyer is as a result of the trial court’s order — whose rights or
interests are injured by the order or judgment.
(County of Alameda
v.
Carleson
(1971)
The court does not weigh the evidence but instead merely assesses whether the plaintiff has stated and substantiated his or her claim.
(College Hospital Inc. v. Superior Court, supra,
8 Cal.4th at pp. 716-720.) Discussing section 1714.10 in particular, one Court of Appeal described this legal standard as “[w]hether or not the evidence is in conflict, if the petitioner has presented .. . evidence showing that a prima facie case will be established at trial, the trial court must grant the petition.”
(Hung v. Wang, supra,
8 Cal.App.4th at pp. 933, 929-934.) So applied, the statute passes constitutional muster in preserving the right to trial by jury.
(Id.
at pp. 931-933;
Aquino
v.
Superior Court
(1993)
The court observed: “The difficulty is that the tainted and the permissible were conjoined in a single cause of action .... Insofar as section 1714.10 is concerned, respondents’ civil conspiracy count must survive or fall as a single unit. In this case it fails because it includes [the law firm], which is entitled to the protections of prefiling procedures. The conspiracy cause of action was therefore an unauthorized filing, no better than a courtroom trespasser, and subject to a motion to strike.”
(Evans, supra,
This is not to say that causes of action for declaratory relief, accounting, and waste of corporate assets cannot be stated against Sherwood alone as Pluris’s assignee for the benefit of creditors. Indeed, these claims had already been pleaded, post, against Sherwood at the time of the amendments naming Sulmeyer as a party. Berg’s prior pleading (the first amended complaint) is beyond the scope of review of this appeal and we express no opinion as to the merits of the claims asserted against Sherwood there. We do acknowledge that in addition to the amendments to the second amended complaint that involved the conspiratorial allegations against Sulmeyer, the pleading also included other minor factual matters unrelated to Sulmeyer. Some of these facts, which concern events that occurred after the action was filed, are more appropriately asserted in a supplemental pleading. In any event, our opinion is not intended to later preclude these other factual amendments that relate only to Sherwood, and Berg is free to again seek leave to amend or supplement its complaint in order to assert them.
Despite some conceptual similarities, civil liability for aiding and abetting the commission of a tort, which has no overlaid requirement of an independent duty, differs fundamentally from liability based on conspiracy to commit a tort.
(Casey
v.
United States Nat. Assn.
(2005)
The Court of Appeal in
Morales
did state that when an attorney undertakes to provide advice to a trustee, “he in reality also assumes a relationship with the beneficiary akin to that between trustee and beneficiary.”
(Morales, supra,
See also American Bar Association (ABA) Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility, Counselling a Fiduciary, Formal Opinion 94-380 (May 19, 1994) [“When the fiduciary is the lawyer’s client all of the Model Rules prescribing a lawyer’s duties to a client apply. . . . The fact that the fiduciary client has obligations toward the beneficiaries does not impose parallel obligations on the lawyer, or otherwise expand or supersede the lawyer’s responsibilities under the Model Rules of Professional Conduct”]. This language undercuts any suggestion provided in the comment to ABA Model Rules, rule 1.2 that an attorney representing a fiduciary may have “special obligations” to the beneficiary in the trust situation.
A crucial difference between bankruptcy and the state law assignment for the benefit of creditors that is material to the allegations against Sulmeyer here is the requirement in bankruptcy of court approval of the debtor’s or the trustee’s legal representation — subject to the condition that counsel be “disinterested” and not represent or hold an interest adverse to the estate — and court controls on counsel’s compensation. (11 U.S.C. §§ 327(a), 328(c), 329(a); Fed. Rules Bankr. Proc., rule 2016 (11 U.S.C.); see
In re Dieringer
(Bankr. N.D.Cal. 1991)
California does not have a comprehensive statutory scheme that governs assignments for the benefit of creditors after repeal in 1980 of former Civil Code sections 3449-3473.
(Credit Managers Assn. v. National Independent Business Alliance
(1984)
For an excellent articulation of the issues and a survey of this conflict, see Bowles, Jr. & Rapoport, Has the DIP’s [debtor-in-possession’s] Attorney Become the Ultimate Creditors’ Lawyer in Bankruptcy Reorganization Cases? (Spring 1997) 5 Am. Bankr. Inst. L.Rev. 47, 78-79. The article observes that the authors’ review “of the case law on [an attorney’s] duties toward the Estate convinced [them] of two things. First, in the universe of permissible Estate Counsel conduct, courts have been able to isolate individual examples of good and bad behavior, but they haven’t been able to articulate a coherent, overall standard for attorneys to follow. Second, the semantic gymnastics that courts have used to justify the imposition of a fiduciary duty going beyond the Estate to individual creditors have been based on the following false syllogism: It is simply not true that
“Major premise 1 (correct): The DIP owes fiduciary duties to the Estate.
“Major premise 2 (correct): The Estate Counsel owes fiduciary duties to his/her/its client, the Estate.
“Minor premise (questionable at best): If the Estate is insolvent, it’s ‘owned’ by its creditors because there is no value left in the Estate for its shareholders or other equity owners.
“Conclusion (false): Therefore, the Estate Counsel owes fiduciary duties directly to each creditor.”
With heavy citation to authorities, the article goes on to persuasively discuss why it is so, in the authors’ view, that the attorney for the debtor in possession does not owe fiduciary duties directly to the bankruptcy estate’s creditors, or to any one of them.
From this it seems clear that the “duty” running in favor of the plaintiff referred to in this exception is not an independent one owed by the lawyer as in the statute’s first exception, but is instead one “peculiarly” owed by the client to the plaintiff.
The rationale for not characterizing a contingency fee agreement as a personal financial interest of the attorney for purposes of applying the statutory exception is that a contingent fee contract does not transfer to the attorney any rights to the client’s cause of action. Rather, it gives the attorney a lien on the client’s prospective recovery.
(Isrin v. Superior Court
(1965)
Since we have disposed of the appeal in this manner, it is not necessary for us to reach the issue whether Sulmeyer’s conduct was protected by the litigation privilege afforded at section 47, subdivision (b), and we accordingly decline to do so.
Judge of the Santa Clara County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
